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The ‘Great Game’ Redux? China and Development Heterodoxy in a Multi-polar World 2013–2023
The European Journal of Development Research, Volume: 37, Issue: 5, Pages: 965 - 984
Swansea University Author: Gerard Clarke
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DOI (Published version): 10.1057/s41287-025-00714-8
Abstract
In the ten years between late 2013 and late 2023, China’s approach to international development evolved at pace and, by 2023, China asserted a leading role in the framing and delivery of international cooperation to support transformational change in the Global South. This article explains the basis...
| Published in: | The European Journal of Development Research |
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| ISSN: | 0957-8811 1743-9728 |
| Published: |
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
2025
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| Online Access: |
Check full text
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| URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa70140 |
| Abstract: |
In the ten years between late 2013 and late 2023, China’s approach to international development evolved at pace and, by 2023, China asserted a leading role in the framing and delivery of international cooperation to support transformational change in the Global South. This article explains the basis for, and unpacks, China’s assertion, and the contribution it makes to evolving development heterodoxy. Adopting a constructivist approach and focusing on a conceptual trinity of institutions, infrastructure and influence, it explores: (1) new multilateral institutions and the expanded BRICS alliance; (2) The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI); and (3) China’s Global Community of Shared Future (GCSF) & Global Development Initiative (GDI) policies. China, with allies, it concludes, is engaged in a ‘great game’ in which it simultaneously cooperates and competes with Western interests that have traditionally dominated the development enterprise, fuelling development heterodoxy, and reframing development discourse to the benefit, primarily, of countries in the global South. |
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| Keywords: |
China; Xi Jinping; Policy Evolution; Belt & Road Initiaitive; BRICS+; Global Development Initiative |
| College: |
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
| Funders: |
Swansea University |
| Issue: |
5 |
| Start Page: |
965 |
| End Page: |
984 |

